johnnyb
Established Member
Does anyone have an older axi catalogue that lists traditional window cutters? Could I ask for a photo of the page pleeeease!
Page 204 of the September 1993 Axminster catalogue has a small illustration of Whitehill spindle cutter profiles.Does anyone have an older axi catalogue that lists traditional window cutters? Could I ask for a photo of the page pleeeease!
I am not quite sure what you mean here. Do you mean specifically bottom or top sash ? Both ?How do you regular sashmakers joint your meeting rails? Does anyone have any pics?
Yep they are proper skinny,you can see the dowel in the glazing bar.I made both meeting rails in one piece adding hugely to its complexity. But I was keen to try it by the book.albeit with the top and bottom rails using the cutters I got. It would be much easier to make as you suggest with plant on meeting rails!
Most books suggest the bars are run vertically to resist the forces(Inc through wedges at the meeting rails and top rail with cross dowels giving resistance on the deep bottom rail.
12mm bars are real thin. What's the rebate like 5mm. Many of the bars that small were dowelled together on the horizontals to try and leave some strength in the verticals(some dowel boxes have survived) I guess those dovetail tenons were also used in those Georgian frames as they hadn't yet started using horns to beef up the top sash stiles. When I've done thin ones on doors I've used a small mortice on the bars (1/4 on a 3/8 or 1/2 inch "typical" mortice arrangement to add doff to the bars.) It's worked well but results in an odd cogged joint(this could be made as a scribe tbh)
The wood was just scrap to practice on but it turned out the softwood was a used joist(11 by 3) and was very punky in areas.
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